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Show THE TIMES-NEW- NEPHI. UTAH S. Traveling Around to Check Up on Radio Industry Some of the 8,000 Armenians Expelled by Turks frr iJ.V. Mid. Interior view of motor truck maintained by the Department of Commerce which travels about Investigating interference, inspecting stations, checking wave lengths and In other ways keeping tab on the radio Industry. J. E. Brown Is shown at one of the Instruments. Chicago Gets Noted Laughing Cat Commissioners, appointed by the League of Nations have been In Zakhe and Mosul, Mesopotamia, a British mandate, Investigating stories of the deportation by Turkish troops of 8,000 Christian Armenians. George Seldea, American Journalist, told the league commission of the outrages and gave It the above photograph of some of the despoiled refugees which he made near Zakhe. WANTS TO RULE OHIO Sk ,S si 4 JtT :0 Procession at Investiture of Rumanian Patriarch fx - fjt af.s'i. -- f'd .?az-': of Cliillicothe, Mo., is now In Chisociety. Thomas S. Hogan and H. the feline optimist and presented is believed to be the only living l? ( ' tr a -- , ' 1..-- '.? "While Mule," the famous laughing cat cago as a permanent mascot of the Missouri E. Kice In a recent visit to Missouri secured It to President A. W. Dulh. "White Mule" laughing cat. tW- - Mrs. Evalyn Frances Snow of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, will seek the Republican nomination for governor of Ohio In the primaries next August. She has long been active in political, patriotic and philanthropic organizations and has served as head of the state board of movie censors. Her two sons saw service in. France In the World war and one of them became vice consul at Leeds. "U I . ! aim 1 i 1 Rumania has a new patriarch, and this photograph shows the dignitaries of the church In procession In Bucharest at his investiture. ff,-,,4- l . mntr Table Rock's "Leg" Won't Last Long BEAUTY WINS HONOR 4 BANDITS' NEMESIS Forest Dream on Her Last Voyage fe. 4 I inr-- " iTifi - ViirrlaAi if Miss Dorothy Revier 'hi -- '"'.! -.- of Oakland, Cal., has been selected as the first of 23 movie stars to pose for portraits of beautiful women In the Salon V" few The Forest Dream, barkentlne, sailed from Los Angeles harbor recently on what probably will be the last circumnavigation of the gli'be by any sailing vessel. Capt. Walter H. Meyers and eleven men comprise the crew of the Forest Dream. d nld-tim- e Diplomat Is Good Billiard Player t V ? 1 -- s. - ' . TO DIE FOR MURDER Lake Erie's famous table rock on the north shore of Kctley's bduud. noted ns the fueling place of Walk in the Water, the llrst steamboat, soon will be a thing of the past. The winds and waves of many centuries have so weakened Its "leg" that It Is expected to topple most any day. STILL CRUISING At 4 f 3L William ("Dad") Harris of Cleveland, Ohio, sixty-nin- e years old and a gasoline f tat Ion attendant, who was presented with a gold medal, suitably inscribed, by the city of Cleveland, .in recognition of his services to the community In shooting and capturing four pairs of bandits. d'Art at the Philadelphia exposition next year. Miss Revier, one of the Wampas "baby stars" of 1025, was educated at Oakland nder the name of Dorothy Valerga, and became well known In amateur theatricals. Showy Stunt of an Aviator f Fir I ! U -- ' I - t -- ;' ' ' - H : 10 V Mrs. Fannie Soper of Kllzabethtown, N. J., who has been convicted of the murder" of her third husband, Henry Soper, and sentenced to death la the electric chair. Power of Light llf V. t Mrs. Jack Iindon, widow of the noted writer, photographed as she was w York on the about to sail from V hciif vcr Manuel C. Mexli-uuinhiixsudur to the United States, anniversary of her husband's death. Telle, feels In need of relaxation lie turns to the billiard room In the magnificent After a short stay In England Mrs, embassy. Setior Tellei Is an pnthuslastlc player and Is credited with playing London expected to Join Ennllsh nn excellent g itne. Senor Antonio Castro-Lcacounselor of the embassy, la friends for a cruise In the Mediterranean in their howft watching whllt Senor Telle mukes a shot. sloop. l, 45-fo- V I V 5 j JMj)W ,.,, l?tei-?Vlimj- It has been pointed out that not on! the direction and Intensity of light but Its color must be considered In estimating Its iower to reveal fine details. Kxperiinent shows that most persons are shortsighted for blue and violet light. When patterns are Illuminated alternately with red, green snd blue light It Is found that for ease of seeing minute details blue ami green light ore preferable to red for short distances, but that nt greater One f the stunts of an adventurous iilrman, who Is changing from a distances red light gives the best boat to uz airplane over the Mlsulppl river. i!oth boat and piano moving at a speed of forty miles im hvjr. 1 y vn |